Help from Others: Encouragement, Teaching, and Support

4th article in the series, “I Can Do Anything?

Plenty of time + lots of hard work + tons of help from others = success

Encouragement

I was visiting a sister dojo, it was the end of class, and the Sensei asked us for twenty pushups. I was already very tired from a long day and from almost an hour of intense karate. I knew I couldn’t do twenty but I was going to give it my best shot. My arms started to shake before I’d reached the number I knew I could do. I’d also fallen behind the count. I was so frustrated I was fighting tears.

 

 

Someone came alongside me and knelt down. I was too tired and discouraged to care who it was. I hoped I wasn’t in for a lecture. I heard a man’s voice quietly explain, “Form is more important than numbers right now. Tighten your core – don’t sag your belly. You got this. Now down slowly. That’s it. Now up. One more. Down slowly, and up.” The instructing Sensei finished the count and my helper quietly left so I wasn’t able to sneak a glance to confirm who it was.

If the leading Sensei had yelled at me for being weak I probably would’ve reacted badly – probably disrespectfully. I wouldn’t have gotten those extra two pushups out of my arms. Encouragement is powerful. After that class I was motivated to keep working on my pushups on my own. That’s saying a lot because I really don’t like pushups. Every day I now do as many good pushups as I can. Then I do as many as I can on my knees. I stumbled across a trick I’d been missing – I finish with as many “pushups” as I can do by standing up and leaning into the wall. (If anyone has any more tips, I’d be grateful to hear them because my progress is slow!)

For some people, encouraging others is as natural as breathing. Others, like myself, might need a lot of practice at quickly getting past negative emotions to come up with something that will build up, not tear down. I am very glad to have many good examples in my life – THANK YOU! Hearing encouraging words at just the right time feels like water on dry soil. Every time I hear or read encouraging sentiments, I learn something that I can hopefully pass along to someone else some day. Encouragement is one of the many ways others can help us be successful in the dojo and in life.

 

Teachers and Peers

We need teachers to help us along. They are the experts. Teachers have already been where you are. They know what you need to do next. Most importantly, teachers are there to push you outside your comfort zone when you need to be pushed. They give us perspective on what we do. It’s difficult for me to see what I’m doing in karate because I don’t have eyeballs outside my head. Mirrors help a little bit, but how am I supposed to know what to look for? For that I need an expert. Sure I could watch a video to try to learn a technique, but I guarantee if I show one of my Senseis that technique, he’ll spot something I missed. Teachers answer questions like, “What happens if I do it this way?” or “How does this work?” The teachings of an expert is precious and vital to success.

Peers are a blessing too. They are right alongside us, traveling the same road. It’s nice to have company on the journey. We can cheer each other on. We empathize with each other’s challenges. Sometimes when the expert isn’t around, we can at least serve as eyeballs for each other and suggest things to try. Collaboration often produces wonderful results – sometimes even effective new methods of learning. In Karate we work a lot with our peers so we know what our techniques actually do. Good peers aren’t jealous when another excels or receives an award. If we’re contributing to a peer’s success, we feel great about each others’ achievements.

 

Other Helpers

Have you ever thought about the people you don’t always see, but who are also a part of your training? Look around next tournament and see how many workers are not wearing gis or blazers and ties. Our dojo meets at a YMCA, so there’s a whole army of workers whose jobs are vital to the facility – and therefore to my training. For example, there’s a lady who slips into the locker room from time to time in order to keep things tidy. If nobody did that job – yuck! I’d probably get some sort of wierd infection and be out of class for a week. After my last promotion, I thanked my Shallow Water Aerobics instructor for helping me develop strength and endurance. If you really want to blow your mind, think about all the people needed to put together that granola bar you wolfed down before class. Yes, we all need each other!

 

It would take me quite a long time to list everyone who’s been a part of my training. If someone drilled with me, sparred with me, taught me, worked or volunteered at facilities and venues, or encouraged me they’re on the list. Some of the people who have contributed to my training don’t even do martial arts. It’s often difficult to succeed alone – and I think it’s more fun to help and be helped.

What Goes Around Comes Around

I’ve written a lot about receiving help. Let me briefly mention our obligation to give help so that others might succeed. What goes around comes around. Be willing to be a cheerful helper. Someone needs you. Go find out who it is. Encourage. Teach. Walk alongside. Do something constructive when no one’s watching. Help in some way. I guarantee you’ll get more than you give, and that, my friend, is a form of success.

 

Final post in series: success!

Trash Talk Tuesday – Introduction and Red Herring

Welcome!

TrashTalkTuesday
Trash Talk Tuesday!

As martial arts bloggers sometimes we want to make a case for or against something.  Or from time to time we run into comments from others that set our teeth on edge.  I’m starting this series to help us both in our writing and in our dealings with others.

We in the martial arts world have names for our movements.  In Karate, we have oi tsuki, mae geri, etc.  These movements are known and labeled so we can recognize them when we see them and communicate about them efficiently.  We also know how to counter them when they’re thrown at us.  Bad arguments have labels too.  The fact that logical fallacies have labels means lots of other people recognize that these tactics do not build a case for one’s side of an argument.  We can learn to recognize these tactics, defuse them, and hopefully not use them ourselves.

Untrained people invariably throw haymakers because they haven’t been trained in more effective ways of striking.  It’s the same way with arguing.  Most of the time if people use logical fallacies it’s because they simply don’t know how to construct an argument.  Sometimes, though, people will try these tactics in order to get your goat.  Don’t let that happen.  Choose your fights wisely.

So let’s get started with a simple, very common tactic called:

RED HERRING

When a scent dog gets to a certain level of training, he will be asked to find and follow a trail designed to test his focus.  A person will walk off into the woods leaving a scent trail behind and the dog will sniff an old T-shirt and be asked to find that person.  At some point while sniffing through the woods, the dog will encounter a distraction – the scent of a yummy rotten fish leading away from the scent of the person he’s supposed to find.  If you know dogs, you know how exciting that is!  The dog must continue to follow the scent of the person he’s supposed to find no matter how wonderful the stinky fish smells.  See if you can spot the equivalent in the argument below.

Daniel:  Your Sensei doesn’t teach good ethics.  He encourages his students to be bullies and he threatened Mr. Miyagi.

Johnny:  You don’t train in a proper dojo, so who are you to talk?

The issue here is not Daniel’s current level of training or where he trains.  The real issue is the ethics taught at the Cobra Kai School of Karate D’oh!  I’d say this Red Herring has a dash of ad hominem sauce (personal attack).  Johnny is dodging the issue.

If you’d like to learn more, you can follow along in the book The Fallacy Detective by Nathaniel Bluedorn and Hans Bluedorn.

Hard Work: Preparation, Practice, and Attitude

3rd post in the series, “I Can Do Anything?


Plenty of time + lots of hard work + tons of help from others = success

Preparation (or lack thereof)

The first time I started karate (when I was 13) I was sore for a couple of weeks and that was that.  The second time I started karate (as a middle-aged matron) I quickly found out I’d underestimated the effects of age and weight.  I thought I was prepared for rigorous exercise when I first joined my daughter in karate.  After all, I’d been walking the dog for a little over a year. I’d been idle for an entire summer before I’d started karate at age 13, so I reasoned that my exercise in the past year would count for a lot.  It turns out the only thing walking the dog had done for me was I didn’t have a heart attack and die during my first class.  I figured out later that I’d been avoiding steep slopes and favoring flat places.  I should’ve been doing the opposite.  Two months prior to joining the dojo I should have been stretching, doing pushups, doing situps, and attending the two other exercise classes I’ve since added.  I struggled mightily for weeks to get to the point where I wasn’t gasping for breath during class.  I was totally unprepared for hard work.

"Be Prepared!" isn't just for Boy Scouts.
“Be Prepared!” isn’t just for Boy Scouts.

When I came home from that first class I was dripping with sweat and I stank so badly my dog started gagging.  I still drip with sweat, but either the dog has gotten used to my stink or maybe there’s a different mix of hormones that doesn’t distress him.  I’m lighter by sixteen pounds now, so that helps me move better.  I may be moving better, but I’m working just as hard or harder than I did when I was carrying all that extra weight because I’m always pushing myself to do better – hence the sweat.  Movement would be easier if I were content with shallow stances and sloppy technique.  I know better than to slack off, and my Senseis know I know better!  I come to class prepared to work hard, harder, and yes, even harder.

After about three weeks, I got to the point where I wasn’t too stiff or sore to start practicing on the other five days of the week when we don’t have class.  Five whole days a week without karate.  Let me tell you right now I’m not sure why we only have two days a week at the YMCA and I’m not about to throw blame or point fingers.  As far as I’m concerned, it is what it is and I just have to adapt.  Working hard on my karate has to come from myself.  Even if the dojo were open 24/7 I’d still have to practice the things I personally need to work on.

Practice

One of the great things about practice time is my daughter and I can make as many mistakes as we like, go as slowly as we need to, and repeat things until we’ve got them down pat.  My daughter and I set the agenda.  If I find myself flapping around like a spastic duck in class I remind myself I can practice on my own.  I’m more confident next class if I managed to improve whatever’s been bugging me.  Practice gives a real boost to my attitude.

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Practice makes perfect! Easy to say, hard to do.

If I remember I’ve overcome a lot of things in practice time I’m more likely to cheerfully embrace new challenges in class.  I will have a better attitude when my muscles burn, when I’m dripping with sweat, when I’m getting control of my breathing while craning my neck to watch Sensei patiently demonstrate the technique for the third time.

Attitude

Bad attitude is easy.  Burning muscles aren’t fun.  Sweat itches.  I feel old when I’m fighting to get control of my breathing.  It’s so easy to pop up out of the stance when Sensei’s busy talking to the class about something.  It’d be easier to go to the locker room and take a shower than to stay and sweat some more.  Giving in to the desire to collapse and gasp for air is easier than breathing properly and eliminating muscle tension when and where it’s not needed.  It’d be easier to tune Sensei out and be miserable about my discomfort than to actually learn what he’s teaching.  But Karate is not about easy.  It’s about moving towards positive outcomes, and that includes attitude.

A good attitude is crucial to learning and practicing karate.  There’s a long list of ingredients in the recipe for a good attitude: among them is patience, positive thinking, listening ears, humility, courage…  The list of ingredients goes on and on.  The ingredient I like to focus on is joy.  It is a fierce, wild joy that keeps me pushing my limits to see what I can do.  I unleash that fierce wild joy when I perform kata.  It is an elated joy when I have a “perfect moment” and I get a thumbs-up from Sensei.  It is a playful joy when I’m sparring with someone who needs to learn how to spar.  It’s a proud joy when that someone hits back!  It’s a joy mixed with a love for the art when I learn bunkai “hands on.”  It’s a joy that can’t be contained when my daughter has just beaten the snot out of me in kumite and I just have to laugh and hug her.  I often (but not always) remember joy when I get frustrated or discouraged.

Some days I feel more like this guy than the smiling face you see on my profile!
Some days I feel more like this guy than the smiling face you see on my profile!

I confess I need to try for joy when I’m exhausted and sparring yet another round against someone better than I am!  If I dig down and find the joy, maybe I could move beyond wishing class were over and merely reacting to the opponent.  I’ll bet if I prepare ahead of time and practice what I can the attitude will naturally follow.  I’ve overcome tough things before, so I can do it again.  That said, I’m only human and there may come a day when I actually break down in the dojo  (as Sensei Ando Mierzwa of Los Angeles puts it).  I’ve already come close to it once, but someone came alongside to help.  I’ll be writing about that next week.

So what do you do for preparation, practice, and attitude?

Next post in the series:  Tons of Help from Others

Plenty of Time: Looking Uphill

2nd post in the series, “I Can Do Anything?“:


Plenty of time + lots of hard work + tons of help from others = success

I take a walk every morning with my dog.  I have various routes to choose from and I make my decision based on what I have going on later in the day.  Often the walk involves an elevation loss of roughly 380 feet (115.8 m).  Of course I have to regain that elevation to go home.  Most of the time when walking uphill I can’t see very far ahead because I’m among trees or I’m walking on streets with limited sight distance.  But on one of my routes the dog and I come around a bend in the road and there before us stretches a straight street up a big hill.  We have to gain 200  feet (61 m) elevation in half a mile (1.6 km).  This after we’ve already gained 160 feet (48.8 m) elevation in a quarter of a mile (0.4 km) to get to the road that will lead us home.  Psychologically this is the hardest route because I can see every single inch we have to climb.

See the car at the top of the hill?  Looks tiny, doesn't it?
See the car at the top of the hill?  Looks tiny, doesn’t it? Yes, the picture is dark and gloomy – it was raining. Typical for this time of year in my little corner of the world.

Sometimes when I’m watching black belts demonstrating techniques or performing kata it’s like looking up that hill.  I’ve already come a little way and now I see how very far I have yet to go before I reach that level of proficiency.  I know it’ll take years and years.  This could be discouraging if I open the door to self doubt.

Typically I take a moment to look up the hill…  OK, really my dog stops to sniff something, but we’ll pretend I’m the one who decides to pause in the walk.  Like I said, I look up the hill and I acknowledge it for what it is.  Then I put one foot forward (when the dog is ready, of course).  Then I take the next step…  You get the picture.  I look up the hill from time to time to see if there are cars coming or people I should be aware of.  Yes I do measure my progress occasionally.  But mostly I’m looking around near where I am.  I see the beautiful things people have done with their houses and yards.  I watch birds.  My dog often makes me laugh.  Sometimes there are frustrations – the dog lunges at a squirrel and takes forever to quit barking or a car nearly runs us over where the shoulder of the road is overgrown with shrubbery.  Usually the benefits of walking up the hill vastly outweigh the occasional frustrating events.  It takes time, but we eventually get up that hill.  I always find I’ve enjoyed the journey.

In the dojo I’ve learned to enjoy the journey.  Class is always an adventure – I never know what we’re going to work on, what new insight I’m going to get, or if I’m finally going to be able to do the technique that’s been challenging me.  Of course I always must work towards getting better.  I have to keep taking that next step.  And yes, injuries happen or sometimes I have to own up and do push ups for something.  But I don’t have to be discouraged by those adversities or by how far I have yet to go.  I can enjoy the discoveries along the way.  I’m told there’s not really an end to the hill I’m climbing – there’s another hill I haven’t seen yet.  If life circumstances and hard work get me to a black belt, I’m told there will be more hills, more discoveries – enough to keep me busy until I am not physically able to do karate anymore.

That puts fire in my heart.  I can keep going through the time it takes to accomplish my goals if I remember to enjoy the journey.

Are you enjoying your journey?

Looking back I find it's been a beautiful journey all along even if a little rain did fall!
Looking back, I find it’s been a beautiful journey all along even if a little rain fell!

Next post in the series: Lots of Hard Work

I can do anything?

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Sometimes when others tell me I can do anything if I set my mind to it I come up with some unrealistic expectations.  My tendency is to think I will achieve my goal instantly all by myself.  Of course if I entertain that notion for any significant length of time I set myself up for disappointment.  None of this is the fault of the person who is trying to build me up.  Usually when someone tells me I can do anything if I set my mind to it he or she is simply encouraging me to keep on keeping on.  If this comes from someone I trust I know that person isn’t saying it as a platitude.  Chances are he or she is going to back it up with an offer to help.

I don’t instantly achieve anything in Karate.  I’m told I never will.  As I strive to move, strike, and block effectively (or as I at least try not to flap around like a spastic duck), I constantly remind myself:

plenty of time + lots of hard work + tons of help from others = success

Plenty of time.  I’m currently trying to get my feet to land correctly during one move in a particular kata.  I’m thinking in terms of weeks before I can get that movement up to tournament or promotion standards.  That’s not negativity.  I’m being realistic for my lowly belt rank.  Once I can consistently get those feet just right, I can’t stop practicing it.  I’ll have to continue practicing it otherwise I’ll have to start back at square one.  Remember, I’m talking about just the feet in one movement in a kata!  I have a feeling I’d better get used to spending loads of time on each new technique.  Patience is a virtue.

Lots of hard work.  After class my gi is so stinky and wet with sweat I often chuck it straight into the washing machine when I get home.  I spend time outside class both practicing karate on my own and attending other exercise classes to build up my strength, flexibility, grace, and endurance.  Karate is hard mental work too.  For instance, it’s easy to get upset over the angst that a partner displayed while working in a drill.  It’s a lot more work to create opportunities to encourage my fellow student and get her out of that angst.  With each rank I achieve the work will get harder.  I have to be ready to take on the new challenges and responsibilities once I’m promoted.  It’s difficult, but it’s worth it!

Tons of help from others.  Feedback helps you set realistic goals and overcome negative attitudes.  You don’t have eyeballs outside your head, so it’s difficult to see what you’re doing – even with a mirror!  Different perspectives will direct you to loads of things you’ve overlooked.  Expert advice is precious and vital to your success.  For example, three Senseis, one Sempai, and my own daughter have invested time teaching me that foot movement I mentioned above!  I’ve been amazed that each of the four men and my daughter have taught me different aspects of how my feet are supposed to move in that one little part of one kata.  So if that much time and input have been given to me for a foot movement that should be executed in less than a second, how much more has been invested into me during the few months that I’ve been training?  A lot – and probably a lot more than I realize.

Success.  Maybe once you’ve actually achieved something, success doesn’t quite look the way you pictured it before you started pursuing it.  That’s OK.  You’ll probably find your achievement to be even better than you imagined.  But here’s a word of warning.  One thing I’ve learned from belt promotions is once you’ve achieved something, it’s time to set new goals.  Thus the cycle begins again.

I’ll be exploring each aspect of this “equation” in the weeks to come, and I’ll add links above as I publish the articles.

So what do you think when you hear the words, “You can do anything if you set your mind to it?”

Next article in the series:  Plenty of Time